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If you love Kiwi sport, how can you best pay tribute via a tiki tour through the country? Andrew Alderson goes north to south looking at 10 significant destinations to build into a whistlestop holiday.

Five-year-old Peter Blake began sailing here in the family Frostply dinghy.Once he turned eight, his father built him a P-class called Pee Bee and a passion was born when he wasn't practising the piano.

Blake went on to skipper Steinlager II in the Round the World race in 1989-90, winning every leg, and led the Team New Zealand syndicate to win and defend the America's Cup in 1995 and 2000 respectively.

Grab a bat and play a few, preferably MCC-manual, shots. This idyllic setting in One Tree Hill's shadow, and nestled next to Greenlane Hospital, was cricket central for young Martin Crowe.

Under the tutelage of mentor Harold Whitcombe, Crowe spent hours dedicating himself to being the best in the game. His formidable legacy as scorer of the most test centuries for New Zealand still stands.

It might be worth popping in to say hello but a word of advice if you're introducing yourself to Sir Patrick. Years ago, a television reporter thought he'd fudge not knowing who he was by opting for the age-old trick of asking him to spell his name. 'S-I-R..." Hogan began with a twinkle in his eye.

The original home of 2005 United States Open champion Michael Campbell and a US soldiers' camp during World War II.

Aged 10, Campbell began caddying for dad Tom at the course. Within two years, he had a handicap of 11, and within four, he'd broken the club course record. After helping win the Eisenhower Trophy in 1992, he turned pro and contested the big bucks.

The first Winter Olympic medallist from the Southern Hemisphere began her career at this alpine retreat.

Annelise Coberger took silver in the slalom as a 20-year-old at Albertville in 1992, 17 years after she first took to the slopes at Porter Heights.

She was well placed to try. Grandfather Oscar, an early importer of ski gear, emigrated from Bavaria in 1926. Father Anton was a national skiing champion and both parents went to the 1968 Grenoble Winter Olympics as team officials.

Neville Carter ploughed the family's gherkin and potato field so eight-year-old son Daniel would have somewhere to hone his goal-kicking next to the house.

He became arguably the most complete first five-eighths in rugby history.

Trying your luck at the paddock is now a tourist must-do akin to kissing the Blarney Stone or running with the bulls in Pamplona. Visitors flock to take photos, kick balls over the famous 'H' and picnic.

Jack Lovelock received an oak tree from Adolf Hitler after winning the 1500m gold in a world record 3m 47.8s at the 1936 Berlin Olympics. The former dux and head prefect brought it back to his old school, where it was planted and remains to this day. A nearby bronze statue of Lovelock offers the best clue to its location.